Zaner Precious Metals Commentary
Monday, July 6, 2026Gold and silver ease as dollar rebounds modestly
OUTSIDE MARKET DEVELOPMENTS: Risk sentiment is elevated to start the new week, supported by less hawkish Fed expectations in the wake of last week's nonfarm payrolls miss. Payrolls grew just 57k in June, below expectations of 110k. There were also -74k in back-month revisions.
While certainly disappointing, it was a fourth straight month of jobs growth. The jobless rate ticked down to 4.2%, the lowest in a year. However, that was primarily due to a drop in the labor force participation rate to 61.5% (lowest since March 2021).
Fed Chair Kevin Warsh spoke before the report came out on Thursday, calling the job market “steady” and once again emphasizing that the Fed’s priority is bringing inflation back to 2%. San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly used the word “stable” to describe the labor market and went on to say that “one report isn’t going to break this view.”
This aligns with the Warsh-Fed’s vow to deliver price stability. Prospects for a 25 bps rate hike at the July FOMC meeting are edging back up, after falling to 18.8% on Thursday. Fed funds futures continue to price in at least one rate hike by year-end, underpinning the dollar.
The fragile US/Iran ceasefire continues to hold, and indirect negotiations in Doha are ongoing. Iran reportedly continues to push a toll scheme for the Strait of Hormuz. I can't imagine any situation in which President Trump would agree to that as part of a broader peace deal.
A major Russian missile and drone attack struck Kyiv overnight, killing at least 11 people and injuring dozens more.
Moscow framed it as payback for Ukrainian strikes on Russian energy infrastructure, reinforcing Putin’s narrative of fighting “NATO aggression” to his domestic audience. The attack comes just a day ahead of the NATO summit in Turkey.
The Fed's path is likely to remain the market's focus this week. Minutes from the June meeting come out on Wednesday. We'll also hear from the Fed's Waller, Williams, and Logan. The NATO summit will generate headlines, especially with President Trump in attendance.
GOLD
OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CT: -$20.05 (-0.48%)
5-Day Change: +$138.09 (+3.44%)
YTD Range: $3,960.16 - $5,595.02
52-Week Range: $3,270.50 - $5,595.02
Weighted Alpha: +12.79
Gold starts the week modestly lower after briefly ticking above $4,200 in overseas trade. The yellow metal got a boost last week after the weak payrolls print led to short covering amid tempered expectations for a rate hike this year.
Arguably, the trade overreacted to the jobs number with the Fed still squarely focused on taming inflation. Fed funds futures continue to portend at least one 25-bps rate hike this year, which provides some support for the greenback.
With the rise above the 20-day moving average, there is scope for further corrective gains toward the trendline at $4,341. However, the $4,381.78 high from 17-Jun is likely to remain protected. Heightened geopolitical tensions could help that cause.
In other words, I'm not convinced that the low is in, and the recent gains are likely to be viewed as a selling opportunity. A breach of Friday's low at $4,121.57 would shift focus to the halfway back point of the recent rally at $4,073.61. Below the latter, look for a return to the $4,000 zone with potential for another run at the low for the year at $3,945.52.
Heightened belief that the Fed will remain on hold, or more importantly, that a rate cut is back on the table, would put the brakes on the recent dollar rally. That would return a measure of confidence to the underlying uptrend.
SILVER
OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CT: -$0.306 (-0.49%)
5-Day Change: +$3.518 (+6.03%)
YTD Range: $55.666 - $121.630
52-Week Range: $36.201 - $121.630
Weighted Alpha: +35.17
Silver hit a three-week high in overseas trading before retreating into the range. The streak of higher daily closes seems likely to end at four sessions as the market shrugs off the jobs miss, and the dollar recovers somewhat.
The lack of momentum on the recent gains is suggestive of corrective activity. The bear camp will also be encouraged by the fact that the 20-day MA has contained the upside thus far.
A breach of Friday's low at $60.924 would favor a return to the $60 zone with potential to the 50% retracement level at $59.466. Below that, the small double bottom at $55.727/666 would be back in play.
While scope remains for fresh lows toward Fibonacci retracement levels at $53.695 and $53.340. Were seeing some renewed buying interest in the semiconductor sector amid reviving optimism that the AI investment boom has more room to run. This could boost capex expectations and brighten the picture for industrial demand for silver
The multiyear supply deficit and expectations for the ongoing expansion of industrial demand paint a long-term bullish picture. However, silver really needs to regain the $90 level to re-establish confidence in the dominant uptrend. That's a long way away.
Volatile trading below $75 is likely to prevail for the remainder of the summer, with many still smarting from silver's fall from grace earlier in the year. Given the supply/demand picture, a more than 50% plunge from the record high of $121.630 will be tempting when trading desks are fully staffed again after the summer holidays, and retail investors can look at the chart with some degree of confidence that the low is in.
Peter A. Grant
Vice President, Senior Metals Strategist
Zaner Metals LLC
312-549-9986 Direct/Text
[email protected]
www.zanermetals.com
Non-Reliance and Risk Disclosure: The opinions expressed here are for general information purposes only and should not be construed as trade recommendations, nor a solicitation of an offer to buy or sell any precious metals product. The material presented is based on information that we consider reliable, but we do not represent that it is accurate, complete, and/or up-to-date, and it should not be relied on as such. Opinions expressed are current as of the time of posting and only represent the views of the author and not those of Zaner Metals LLC unless otherwise expressly noted.
















